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1989
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Library Journal Review
This wonderful, insightful, hilarious story of a classic marriage mismatch reveals Wilcox ( Modern Baptists, Miss Undine's Living Room ) at his best. Fortyish, unmarried Gretchen, of old New York family and money, literally runs into widower Frank Dambar (unaccountably pronounced ``Denner'') in a souvenir shop in New Orleans. Instant chemistry turns quickly to marriage, she moves into his Tula Springs, Louisiana, home, and though infatuation remains (Frank likes to fantasize that she's a maid), in all other areas of life, the two might as well be from different planets. Devoted old housekeeper Mrs. Howard and odd handyman Leo, as well as the lingering influence of dead wife Jane, add to the household tension. Warmly recommended for all fiction collections.-- Ann H. Fisher, Radford P.L., Va. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publishers Weekly Review
In Wilcox's stylish and leisurely cautionary tale, again set in Tula Springs, La. ( Miss Undine's Living Room ), a woman gives up everything for the man she adores, only to become a widow. A neurotic, well-heeled Manhattanite from an elite New England family, Gretchen seems an unlikely match for stolid Southern businessman Frank Dambar, but she convinces herself that in Tula Springs she can put her life in order and complete her book about U.S. imperialism in the Philippines, where she had been a Peace Corps worker. Instead, she comes into conflict with Frank's motley household, among whom are his busybody niece, an intellectual handyman who wears his hair in a ponytail and the buxom, loud-mouthed German housekeeper. Gretchen's confusion is revealed when she starts seeing a female therapist, then hires a potbellied young CPA to spy on Dr. Lakey. After her husband's sudden death, Gretchen slumps into a Valium-induced lethargy, and readers don't learn until the final pages whether she will snap out of a Southern idyll that was not meant to be. Wilcox's antic humor is less evident here than in his three previous novels, but it is an undercurrent to the pathos he evokes as he dissects the foibles of people who lead half-examined lives. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Booklist Review
Wilcox returns to the setting of Miss Undine's Living Room [BKL S 1 87] for another go-round with the residents of that typical southern town, Tula Springs. This time the comedy is laced with darker premonitions, and the heroine is (God forbid!) a northerner who has married into local society but doesn't seem ready to fill the role the town has plotted for her. Not quite as wacky as Wilcox's previous outing in the genre, yet all the stronger for that. --John Brosnahan
Kirkus Review
Wilcox's special fiefdom, Tula Springs, Louisiana, is so sociologically spacious that by now he's able to ship in outsiders and watch how they do there. Gretchen Dambar (pronounced ""Danner"") is the second wife of a wealthy Tula Springs contractor in his 50s, married merely five months after their unlikely (and unsober) meeting in New Orleans. Gretchen is from the East, childless, overeducated and underworked, and thoughtlessly rich--an uncle in New England oversees her money, at least a million, which frees her to view things financial as vulgar and unworthy of talk. She's a vintage twit, in other words--and what comedy the ordinarily hilarious Wilcox (North Gladiola, Miss Undine's Living Room) musters here falls squarely on her twittiness. After being appalled at the lack of ""culture"" in Tula Springs, she finds herself accommodating by becoming pain-in-the-neck natural ("". . .She was not giving up on the idea of purchasing a cow. It wasn't the milk and butter that interested her but the animal itself. To enter into a relationship with something so basic and primeval was bound to do her good. She really wished to care for something large and mute like that""). Then, when nature becomes too unappealing, she turns to social paranoia instead, suspecting her husband's household staff of trying to do her, her husband, and maybe even each other in. The ponytailed bachelor handyman, Leo Vogel, she especially mistrusts, and their dance around each other is the main event here. For all the indelibility of its completely eccentric yet--in context--utterly believable characters, this is the first Wilcox novel to drift sideways, punctuated only by blows of authorial fate, as in E.M. Forster. It goes nowhere special, and some of the satirical arrows shot Gretchen's way don't stick in because she's such a pincushion already. But Wilcox, even at his most feckless, as here, is still an unusually interesting novelist, never blind to comedies and honors where they're not supposed to be. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Summary
Returning to the setting of his widely beloved first novel, Modern Baptists, James Wilcox tells the story of the unlikely of a Tula Springs, Louisiana, native and a transplanted Manhattanite. The result: a comic delight. Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved.
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